The Diana Vreeland set that got its own applause? That's by Joey Mendoza

The Diana Vreeland set that got its own applause? That's by Joey Mendoza
By Walter Ang
April 12, 2014
Philippine Daily Inquirer

It isn't every day that a set design receives applause from an audience.

Joey Mendoza's scenery for "Full Gallop," a play about former Vogue editor in chief Diana Vreeland after she'd been axed from the magazine, received applause for every single show in its recently concluded run, staged by Actor's Actors Inc. and My Own Mann Productions, at RCBC Plaza in Makati.

When the curtains rose at the start of the show, audiences invariably burst into spontaneous clapping at the sight of Mendoza's interpretation of Vreeland's apartment.

Mendoza had seen the original production of "Full Gallop" in New York.

"I immediately thought Manila would relate to this easily," he says.

Last year, when he heard there was talk of a Manila run, he got in touch with director Bart Guingona. "He's a friend from way back. I told him I knew the show well and it's been a dream to design it."

Guingona extended an invitation to design the set, and "I agreed immediately! Cherie Gil, the play's star and producer, was in New York December last year and we met at Tabule restaurant in Hell's Kitchen. I showed her some sketches on my iPad over appetizers and we got along famously. She was animated and funny and I had no doubt she could own the stage I wanted to design. I was designing the set with her in mind from the get-go."

Process
Mendoza is mindful that not everyone knows who Vreeland is.

"However, I don't think anyone who knows more about fashion would enjoy 'Full Gallop' exponentially more than those who know less. The show is really about this force named Vreeland who was a larger-than-life character, a character that has to draw audiences and not scare them off-and designing the show had to reflect that.

"I also only knew a bit about Vreeland. I'm not a hardcore fashionista, but in Manhattan, you're constantly assaulted by fashion and style on the streets. Vreeland differentiated fashion and style: It isn't what you are wearing, but how you are wearing it-and I think the same can be applied in set design. You can have all the right fashionable pieces, but putting it together is the key."

Mendoza read the play, Vreeland's autobiography "DV," and other articles about the woman to get to the bottom of what she was like.

"If she were still around, how would she like her apartment to look today?" he asked himself.

Mendoza then made a mood board with photos of Vreeland's Park Avenue apartment, accessories and other images that helped inspire the tone of his design.

"One of the images in my mood board was a bottle of Opium Yves Saint Laurent perfume. I liked the gloss and clean lines, that black tassel and the leafy pattern on the box. I used some of that in the final design," he recalled.

Warm and funny
From there, Mendoza worked on crafting the look. "I researched other designers' work on the Internet. The original production's design by James Noone is a wonderful recreation of her famous red apartment, which worked well in Manhattan Theatre Club's intimate space. That was sort of the trend in set design in the '90s, but it's already 2014 and I definitely did not want to recreate that.

"Her 'Garden in Hell' apartment was designed by arguably the most celebrated interior designer at the time, Billy Baldwin. I didn't think it wise to mimic him.

"When I saw the play, I remember feeling like I was the early guest in her dinner party and she was entertaining me in her own ridiculous way, but always with a knowing wink and look, as if I were in on the joke.

"`Full Gallop' isn't a documentary or a museum piece. It's theater! And Vreeland is so theatrical. The play seems hysterical and large and I sensed that a realistic apartment wasn't right for this.

"I designed the three different wallpaper patterns: paisley, chintz and striped. The first two had a garden motif (leaves, vines, flowers) and there is a touch of blue in the chintz pattern that supposedly adds a somewhat `bruised' hue.

"The third was a homage to Baldwin. I like the sort of whimsical, almost circus-like candy stripe pattern and palette.

"The focal point is an enormous tied-back curtain, to add softness and texture and a sense of drama. Also, I think it's just hilarious, to have this huge fabric swatch on stage. The set needs to have a sense of humor, I think. The set, like Vreeland, while at first might seem intimidating, is actually warm and funny."

Hyperbolic, operatic
Mendoza was also inspired to create a hanamichi (a platform connected to the stage) for the set following a line in the play that mentions a kabuki actor.

"The runway platform used in kabuki is pretty much the same idea used in fashion shows. The set needed to be hyperbolic and operatic in scale, but intimate at the same time."

Mendoza also used music to enrich his process. "The play did not have a sound designer on board, so I just forged ahead with a song list myself and Bart was open to it. The set needed that support."

"The set is a modern interpretation in the spirit of Vreeland and I think it is critical that music should establish that. I didn't think a literal all-period, early '70s and oldies mix would have been right. How boring!

"I listened to jazz, swing, house, lounge, pop and hip hop. The songs before the play begins are performed by Rose Murphy, very playful and childlike. It turns contemporary-Parov Stelar's Booty Swing, followed by Lil' Louis, Demitri from Paris, Lady Gaga, Justin Timberlake and eventually Jay-Z and Alicia Keys doing `Empire State of Mind'; artists she would probably be hanging out with today."

Working across the world
Mendoza was a Repertory Philippines workshop attendee who graduated into backstage work and acting roles. His first set design was for a staging of the musical "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown" in Dumaguete City.

Mendoza moved to New York in the early '90s and got involved with Rep alumni Jorge Ortoll's theater group, Ma-Yi Theatre Company, as a board member and designer. Since then, his work has been seen on the stages of LaMama ETC, The New World Theatre, Theater Row and others.

His recent design credits in New York include collaborations with Lou Moreno, artistic director for Intar; and Ralph Peña, artistic director of Ma-Yi Theatre Company. He's also a regular guest designer at Fordham University's theater program at Lincoln Center, where he also regularly mentors and critiques students in scenic design.

Mendoza had recently designed two other productions in Manila, both for Repertory Philippines: "Little Women" (Philstage Gawad Buhay! citation for Outstanding Set Design) and "Jekyll & Hyde."

"Working long-distance is an unconventional but not untried method; other foreign-based designers have done it that way before. Also, working styles in NY can be very different from that of Manila and I needed to adjust to that. There was a lot of email exchanges and Skype-ing in the process and that helped tremendously," he says.

Beautiful things
Mendoza created a source book for the production team, a detailed compendium of images for every single item used on stage: A variety of coffee tables, side tables, consoles, chairs, lamps, carpets, accessories, flowers, vases, etc.

"Vreeland says `I only want beautiful things!' in the first few minutes of the play. I think it says it all."

"I was fortunate enough to have a great team headed by production manager Ria Pangilinan to go on a scavenger hunt throughout Manila and beyond. In the end, only the bookshelf had to be custom-built. The production's set assistants Jojo Amboy and Ogie Reonal were tenacious and sticklers. The set couldn't have been done without them."

"I requested my brother, Anton, who is a successful interior designer in his own right, to be my eyes. He showed up on production week and adjusted the furniture and accessories. He walked all around the theater and adjusted accessories and set pieces for maximum impact.

"My siblings and I grew up not with comic books, but a collection of art, architecture and interior design books, which were always accessible on my parents' coffee table. My father is an architect and my mother is also an interior designer, both of them modernists. We were very familiar with Billy Baldwin and it made `Full Gallop' so much fun. We were on the same page right from the start and understood the era well. I had no doubt my brother would make it all work."

Also published online:
http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/156827/the-diana-vreeland-set-that-got-its-own-applause-thats-by-joey-mendoza

Tuxqs Rutaquio sings, acts, directs, designs sets and costumes--and collects toys

Tuxqs Rutaquio sings, acts, directs, designs sets and costumes--and collects toys
By Walter Ang
April 5, 2014
Philippine Daily Inquirer

"I have over a hundred toys in my shelf, most of them in mint condition, never taken out of the boxes. Some are loose for display," says Tuxqs Rutaquio.

The collection began in 2004 with an Incredible Hulk action figure.

"I didn't know why I bought it in the first place, but I remember that it reminded me of my childhood and that I noticed how great the craftsmanship is on the details of the figure," he explains.

"At that time, the only things I collected were the comic books that I'd gathered since the 1980s, 'Uncanny X-Men' and 'Mighty Avengers.' I still have them in near mint condition.

The second piece for his collection was a no-brainer. "I never had a Voltes V toy as a child so that was the first hunt," he recalls.

From there, Rutaquio expanded to other robots from '70s and '80s anime such as Daimos, Mazinger Z and Transformers.

Manga-style figurines
He's already transitioned to bishojo figurines. "It means `pretty girls' in Japanese," he notes. "I discovered and fell in love with the pieces of a toy line called Kotobukiya. Shunya Yamashita, a popular manga/anime illustrator famous for his Final Fantasy illustrations, had created Marvel and DC women characters for Kotobukiya in manga style."

He says he has never seen characters like Wonder Woman, Bat Girl, Jean Grey/Phoenix or even Storm in manga style. "I was so fascinated. I got hooked because of their delicate aesthetics and detailed anatomy, showcasing the power and strength of women characters with a touch of sexuality."

He usually gets two different design versions of a character. "I have two versions of Darth Vader, Galactus, Superman (All-Star, being a fan of the Grant Morrison revamp of the story), Batman, Flash Gordon, The Iron Giant, Edward Scissorhands and many more."

All these characters, he says, "have a profound connection in my life . I buy toys that have a history for me, a sentimentality . When you see my collection, it's a summation of who I am because I grew up within the fantasy worlds of robots and superheroes."

Theater work
It's little wonder that he fits right in the world of theater. During his freshman year as a Fine Arts student at the University of the Philippines, Rutaquio was recruited by lighting designer Shakira Villa to help make props for Dulaang Unibersidad ng Pilipinas' (DUP) "Ang Pagbabalik ng Madame."

"I was hooked," he says. "After that night, as much as I could, I joined every production of DUP. In my third year, I shifted to Theater Arts as a Technical Theater major focusing on Set and Costume Design, realizing that I could still apply what I'd learned in Fine Arts."

He focused his energies into learning design, watching plays from other theater companies, specifically works by National Artist for Theater Design Salvador Bernal, who later on became one of his teachers in the masters classes offered by the Cultural Center of the Philippines.

Rutaquio's first design work for DUP was "Elias at Salome," directed by DUP founding artistic director Tony Mabesa. Since then, he's won two Gawad Buhay! Philstage Awards for Outstanding Set Design in Tanghalang Pilipino's (TP) "A Streetcar Named Desire/Flores Para los Muertos" and "Kudeta."

He also dabbled in acting and had Anton Juan as a mentor, appearing in plays such as "Sakurahime," "Drunkenness of Noah" and "Antigone." He was cast in several of Chris Martinez's plays such as "Last Full Show," "Baclofen" and "Last Order sa Penguin." He also did a turn in Madiraka Productions' staging of "Temptation Island . Live!", and was Ada in TP's long-running hit musical "Zsazsa Zaturnnah Ze Muzikal," which also showcased his singing voice.

His more recent acting include the titular role in DUP's "Lulu" and last year's "Der Kaufmann" by TP.

Late bloomer
"I was a late bloomer as a director," admits Rutaquio. "To prepare myself, I started as a stage manager in Jose Estrella's all-women staging of `Waiting for Godot' starring Eugene Domingo, Candy Pangilinan, Lanie Sumalinog, Dolly de Leon and Frances Makil-Ignacio."

Nearing his last year as an undergraduate student, Rutaquio took up directing under Mabesa. His thesis production was Edward Albee's "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?"

He credits directing for the Virgin Labfest (VL), the annual festival of new plays, for helping him hone his skills and find his directing voice. He's done several of Layeta Bucoy's plays for VL such as "Ellas Innocentes" and "Doc Resureccion: Gagamutin ang Bayan."

Rutaquio was appointed festival director of VL two years ago after founding festival director Rody Vera stepped down.

TP stint
After finishing his Masters in Theater Arts in UP, he did design work for Repertory Philippines, Atlantis Productions, Philippine Educational Theater Association and TP.

His involvement with TP mirrors his college experience, as he started out with design (set and costume designer for "Ang Pokpok ng Ohio"), then acting (in "Zsazsa Zaturnnah") and assisting TP artistic director Nanding Josef in "Eyeball: New Visions of Philippine Theater." Soon came an invitation to be TP's associate artistic director.

"What I enjoy most about doing theater is that I can dabble in different aspects of production-not because I get bored easily but because I like learning more and more. It has become my panata to do  all these things in a year," he says.

With TP now carrying out its annual summer theater workshops, Rutaquio is preparing for the company's new season which will open a few months from now with Layeta Bucoy's "Kleptomaniacs."

Commissioned work
Meanwhile, he's still working on his toy collection. He recently commissioned sculptors Wed and Rosa Lodriga to create a 13-inch statue of Zsazsa Zaturnnah.

"Being a great friend, Zsazsa creator Carlo Vergara agreed to have me produce this based on his design, he says. "I enjoyed the process with the Lodrigas. Every week or so, they would consistently send photos on the development of the sculpture. I admired how they took the time to carefully create the statue with love and passion! There are only three statues of this character made-my copy, one with Carlo, and the third with the Lodrigas."

"When I have time, I plan to have it reproduced for distribution to those who want a copy. I would love to produce other characters from the graphic novel with the same team," he adds.

Also published online:
http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/156085/tuxqs-rutaquio-sings-acts-directs-designs-sets-and-costumes-and-collects-toys